Latest Article|September 3, 2020|Free
::Making Grown Men Cry Since 1992
24 min read
Eggs, milk, peanuts. It didn’t look good.I had spent the last hour scavenging the isles of La Montañita Co-op, and that’s what I was left with: eggs, milk, peanuts. I was hungry just looking at them. I offered my meager basket to the cashier, pausing to turn around and grab a hauntingly aromatic chocolate chip cookie from the deli counter behind me. If all I had to eat for the next seven days were eggs, whole milk and peanuts, I was going to enjoy my last meal, and I was going to have dessert.I watched the clock on my cell phone strike midnight, rubbing my fingers together to erase the chocolate from their tips. This was it. For the next week, I would eat only food grown in New Mexico. In the middle of February, I knew it would be difficult. But when I opened my fridge door and saw two cartons and a bag of nuts staring back at me, I wondered if it was even possible. Preparing myself for starvation, I trundled off to bed. Tomorrow I was going “shopping.”
Want to eat local? Here are some websites to guide you on your way. New Mexico Farmers’ Markets www.farmersmarketsnm.orgA directory of all our local farmers’ markets, along with when they run, updated every spring. Mid-Region Council of Governments www.mrcog-nm.gov/content/view/17/55Lists information on how to grow and how to find people who grow in the Middle Rio Grande Basin. Center for Informed Food Choices www.informedeating.orgAdvocates a diet based on whole, unprocessed and local food. Eat Local Challenge www.eatlocalchallenge.comGives resources for those trying to live the life of a locavore. Eatwild www.eatwild.comA directory of local, grass-fed meat and dairy. Eat Well www.eatwellguide.comAn online database of sustainably raised meat and eggs, searchable by zip code Local Harvest www.localharvest.comHelps you find local growers. Locavores www.locavores.comProvides resources for those trying to eat locally, especially those in the Bay Area.